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Latest Update: Monday21/9/2009September, 2009, 11:18 PM Doha Time
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Secular Nepal celebrates Eid
Nepal marked its transformation into a democratic republic by declaring a state holiday on the occasion of Eid

Nepalese Muslims offer the early morning Eid al-Fitr prayer at Kashmiri Mosque in Kathmandu yesterday
Clad in white clothes and white caps, thousands of Muslims thronged to mosques to pray and celebrate as a newly secular Nepal announced the first public holiday for Eid al-Fitr and the first Nepali moon-sighting committee independently heralded the rise of the moon that marks the start of the festival after a month of fasting and intense prayers.

Nepal, once the only Hindu kingdom in the world where conversions were a punishable offence, marked its transformation into a secular democratic republic by declaring yesterday a state holiday on occasion of Eid.
The communist-led government of Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal announced that all its diplomatic missions abroad would also remain closed yesterday for Eid.
Before he left for New York to attend the 64th UN General Assembly, the prime minister issued a message, hoping Eid, with its tradition of helping the poor, would strengthen mutual respect and harmony in Nepal.
The top leaders of the major parties also issued public messages, greeting the
Muslim community on the occasion of Eid. They included former prime minister Pushpa Kamal Dahal
Prachanda, whose Maoist party, bent on a collision course with the government, has also called a truce to honour the string of different religious festivals that started this month.
It is estimated that about 10% of Nepal’s over 29mn population are Muslims with major concentrations in the plains in the south.
 The Terai lowlands saw the first major Muslim penetration in the late 1850s after the failed Sepoy Mutiny in India against British rule when many people, including some of the leaders of the revolt, fled to Nepal.
Eid celebrations this year have been boosted by the recent arrest of the leaders of two militant Hindu underground organisations that had asked Muslims and Christians to leave Nepal or face dire consequences.
Earlier this month, Nepal police arrested Ram Prasad Mainali, the chief of the Nepal Defence Army, who had masterminded attacks against a church and two mosques in Nepal, killing at least five people.
Close on the heels of Mainali’s arrest, police also nabbed Vinod Pandey, the chief of another shadowy Hindu militant group, the Ranavir Sena, which had been demanding the restoration of Hinduism as the state religion.
Also, for the first time, the Muslim community in Nepal determined on its own that Eid would be celebrated yesterday.
The Ruel-e-Hilal Committee formed to sight the new moon sent observers to Rautahat and Sunsari districts in the Terai.
The committee announced on Sunday that the new moon had been glimpsed around 6.30pm local time. Based on the sighting, it was announced that Eid would be celebrated.
The Muslim world still remains divided over the sighting of the new moon.
This time too, there have been two Eids with parts of Pakistan, Afghanistan and the Middle East and US celebrating Eid on Sunday.
However, in Bangladesh, India and Nepal the festival was celebrated yesterday. IANS


 

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